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(bold added by me for emphasis)Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy may be as good as pills at stopping people relapsing after recovering from major bouts of depression, according to a study.
Your questions is in no way stupid @VioletButterfly. It is a profound question that I have asked and many people with anxiety, depression and PTSD and other conditions have asked.Stupid question here - How do you do mindfulness techniques when you are so anxiety-ridden and overwrought that you can't concentrate on reading more than 2 sentences at a time? What are my baby steps to being able to do this "mindfulness" thing? I have checked out and read many books, watched Oprah, watched Dr. Oz, etc...., but am too anxious and "crazy-minded" by anxiety to focus. Also, if it is a mind/body medication where you focus on your breath or relaxing parts of your body, my mind goes haywire. Where do I start with this? I've tried knocking back the time to 2 or 5 minutes, etc..., but I don't keep going as I don't see results. Am I just impatient or this isn't just for me and I'm frustrating myself by trying to impose this on myself as a mandate? Tks. VB
I think that is important to focus on. Initial treatment with mindfulness would not work and it could be quite dangerous. Extremely dangerous for me, anyway.There is a difference between being in the centre of a major depressive episode and being on the climb up out of it. The study was examining relapse rates, not initial treatment rates.
I suspect quite a few people don't understand the nuances of a MDD. It would be setting someone up for severe distress and marked failure to even suggest that mindfulness would be the way to go whilst in the midst of a MDD.There are also some defining lines between really-really-really bad depression and a major depressive episode. This study is talking about recovery from a MDD episode.
I have depression as a comorbid diagnosis, but I still think that even in the midst of a moderate to severe depression is not the time to begin mindfulness.To that point - I think the results could have easily been skewed more towards MCBT beating out the pills for moderate to severe depression, of the type often experienced by PTSD survivors who do not have depression as a comorbid diagnosis.
Me neither.I don't think I'll ever be convinced that MCBT is a practical alternative to some kind of medication support to navigate the initial plunge into a major depressive episode.
For me it was I just didn't get it for such a long time. It is not that I am not willing to do the work. It just didn't get in there. I wish I had gotten hold of this much sooner - doing the challenging the cognitive distortion thing.But once you are on your way up out of the quicksand, I don't know how anyone even gets away with not doing some form of DBT or CBT. Heck yeah, it's effective, whether you drop your meds or no.
I think I was very, very lucky. I had my breakdown at a time and place where I had access to more good support than bad - and it was CBT/DBT and mindfulness. There are other places in the world I could have been where this would have not gone as well for me. But hey - what matters most is getting hold of it, whenever and however.I wish I had gotten hold of this much sooner - doing the challenging the cognitive distortion thing.